[quote="Chris Peterson]
Not necessarily. First of all, there's no way that laser light traveling between stars will stay coherent. Coherence is a property that is lost pretty quickly with distance from the cavity. And simply being nearly monochromatic isn't a guarantee that the source is artificial- natural lasers probably exist, as well as natural narrowband filters. If the sender wants to be sure their signal is recognized as artificial, it's important to modulate it in some way. Low speed data could be transfered with simple AM over huge distances.[/quote]
Wrong wrong wrong
Coherence is whenphotons are "in step" and have a definite phase relation. Unrelated to the point you are making. Lasers will not be detected in another solar system, much less galaxy because of "divergence". Divergence is when the the beam spread out over distance.
Take for example this these lasers
http://www.dragonlasers.com which are pretty much the best the average person can get. They have a divergence of 1.2mRad.
This means for every meter the beam travels, it will spread by 1.2mm. go ahead and multiply 1.2mm by the number of meters required to travel any where outside this solar system then tell me that a laser can be seen!!!
Sure, you can spend A LOT of money and have a much smaller divergence but given the distances the beam will travel, useless.